Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirement For The Award of Degree of Bachelor of Technology in Department of Mechanical Engineering To Rajasthan Technical University, Kota (Raj.)
Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirement For The Award of Degree of Bachelor of Technology in Department of Mechanical Engineering To Rajasthan Technical University, Kota (Raj.)
SEMINAR REPORT
Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirement
For the Award of Degree
of
Bachelor of Technology
In Department of Mechanical Engineering
to
Rajasthan Technical University,
Kota(Raj.)
2015-2016
Submitted To: Mr. Sanjaay Singh Rathore
Asst. Professor
(Mechanical Dept.)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I express my deep sense of gratitude to my guide Mr. Mr. Dharmendra Singh, Lecturer,
Department of Mechanical Engineering, GOVERNMENT ENGINEERING COLLEGE,
BIKANER(RAJ.), for the valuable guidance, constant encouragement and creative
suggestions offered during the course of this seminar and also in preparing this report.
I extend my sincere thanks to Prof. Yunus Shekh, Head of the Department,
Department of Mechanical Engineering, GOVERNMENT ENGINEERING COLLEGE,
BIKANER(RAJ, for providing me with the guidance and facilities for the seminar.
I express my sincere gratitude to the seminar coordinator Mr. Sanjay Singh
Rathore for his cooperation and guidance for preparing and presenting the seminar.
I also extend my sincere thanks to all other faculty members of Mechanical
Engineering Department and my friends for their support and encouragement.
Abstract
Dry machining processes are much better for environment than classical machining processes
using coolant. On removing coolant, we need to develop the new technologies needed. The
productivity of these technologies is now very good and is equivalent to the classical
productivity rates. The main question is to know if these new emerging technologies are
fundamentally better for the environment. The new technology developed is said to be dry
technology, here splitting of the chip in deep drilling can be obtained by vibrating the drill
axially. The studies conducted on self-vibratory drilling (SVD) has led to the design of a
drilling head compatible with the existing tools and machines, and that does not require
additional energy. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate that the environmental impacts
generated by SVD over an industrial production are significantly less than those of TD and to
quantify them.
For that purpose here we are comparing both traditional and SVD with the help of graphs.
The graph comparing the relative weight of environmental impacts of the two processes
according to the 10 indicators like abiotic depletion, acidification, eutrophication, global
warming, ozone layer, human toxicity, fresh water aquatic ecotox, marine aquatic ecotoxicity,
terrestrial ecotoxicity, photochemical oxidation. The negative impact created by dry
machining is that it produces high temperature during the friction between the tool and the
work piece, somehow this can be counteract by providing a interrupted machining
environment. Dry machining also helps in the reduction of thermal shocks.